Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




CARBON WORLDS
Finding the Goldilocks sites to store CO2 underground
by Staff Writers
Bristol, UK (SPX) Jul 10, 2013


Equipment for monitoring seismic activity being deployed in a borehole at the Weyburn CO2 storage site in Saskatchewan, Canada.

Carbon capture and storage has been heralded as a new technology for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. In an effort to help slow climate change, human-produced carbon dioxide (CO2) is captured at point-source emitters like power stations and sequestered in underground rocks. In porous rocks like sandstone, the CO2 is trapped in tiny spaces or pores, which act like a sponge and soak up the injected fluid.

In 2000, one of the first commercial examples of this technology was conducted in Weyburn, Saskatchewan Province, Canada where approximately 3 megatonnes of CO2 (the equivalent of emissions from 500,000 cars) are successfully sequestered every year. Scientists at Bristol have played a key research role in developing methods for monitoring the CO2 migration and storage in this vast oil and gas reservoir.

In a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Dr James Verdon and colleagues from Bristol, the Geological Survey of Canada, the British Geological Survey and BP Alternative Energy compare results from the world's three largest CCS projects.

Their study finds that not all sites are equal and successful implementation of CCS requires careful appraisal. For the approach to work the gas must remain trapped for thousands of years, but some geoscientists have argued that the injection process could increase the pressure enough to open fractures that will allow the CO2 to escape.

To address this concern, Dr Verdon and colleagues examined the 'geomechanical deformation' at three commercial-scale CCS sites that inject more than a megatonne of CO2 underground per year: Sleipner Field in the Norwegian North Sea; Weyburn Field in Central Canada; and the In Salah Field in Algeria. The authors found that these three sites have each exhibited very different responses, highlighting the need for systematic geomechanical appraisals prior to gas injection.

Whilst showing no signs of leakage, the Weyburn site has shown a complicated response, due to a history of 50 years of oil production prior to CO2 injection. At the In Salah site, slower fluid flow means that pressures can build up, and there is evidence for fracturing in and around the reservoir, and uplift of several centimetres at the surface has been seen from satellite monitoring. The size of the Sleipner site, and the excellent flow properties means that approximately 1 megatonne of CO2 can be stored every year with little response from the subsurface.

This variability of response means that future large-scale CCS operations will need to conduct comprehensive and on-going monitoring to ensure continued integrity of underground storage sites, according to the authors.

Dr Verdon said: "Existing commercial CCS sites have shown that, from a technical perspective, it is possible to sequester CO2 in underground rocks. However, to make a dent in mankind's total emissions, billions of tons of CO2 must be stored every year. The challenge is therefore to find 3,000 more sites just like Sleipner.

"Every future CCS site will have a different geological setting, and our study has shown that this can lead to very different responses to CO2 injection. There is not likely to be a 'one-size-fits-all' approach to CCS. Instead, each future site must be judged on its merits: some may be very effective for storing large volumes of CO2, but some may be more limited in the amount of CO2 they can take."

Co-author Dr Mike Kendall added: "This study underscores the importance of long-term monitoring at any CCS storage site. Regulators have yet to impose long-term seismic monitoring guidelines that are necessary to ensure secure storage." 'Comparison of geomechanical deformation induced by megatonne-scale CO2 storage at Sleipner, Weyburn, and In Salah' by James P. Verdona, J.-Michael Kendall, Anna L. Stork, R. Andy Chadwick, Don J. White, and Rob C. Bissell in PNAS.

.


Related Links
University of Bristol
Carbon Worlds - where graphite, diamond, amorphous, fullerenes meet






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








CARBON WORLDS
An unlikely competitor for diamond as the best thermal conductor
Chestnut Hill MA (SPX) Jul 10, 2013
An unlikely material, cubic boron arsenide, could deliver an extraordinarily high thermal conductivity - on par with the industry standard set by costly diamond - researchers report in the current issue of the journal Physical Review Letters. The discovery that the chemical compound of boron and arsenic could rival diamond, the best-known thermal conductor, surprised the team of theoretica ... read more


CARBON WORLDS
Mead Johnson to cut formula prices amid China probe

The balancing act of producing more food sustainably

Earliest evidence of using flower beds for burial found in Raqefet Cave in Mt. Carmel

University of East Anglia research reveals true cost of farming to UK economy

CARBON WORLDS
TU Vienna develops light transistor

Solving electron transfer

Microscopy technique could help computer industry develop 3-D components

New low-cost, transparent electrodes

CARBON WORLDS
Poseidon full-rate production closer

China anxiously awaits updates after Asiana jet crash

Canada, China to boost air links as accord reached

Two killed as chopper crashes at Libya airshow

CARBON WORLDS
New Catalyst replaceable platinum for electric-automobiles

France bans sale of latest Mercedes cars

China auto sales up 11.2% year-on-year in June

Dongfeng, Renault to set up $1.8 bn JV: media

CARBON WORLDS
Australia at crossroads as China boom ends: PM

China accuses GSK staff of corruption, tax crimes

Resource boom helps Latin America improve credit ratings

Mongolia's massive Oyu Tolgoi mine begins copper shipments

CARBON WORLDS
Ancient forest found preserved under Gulf of Mexico waters

Deserts 'greening' from rising CO2

Temperature increases causing tropical forests to blossom

Tropical forests said producing more flowers with climate change

CARBON WORLDS
Google updates Map app with new traffic, exploration functions

Long-lived oceanography satellite decommissioned after equipment fails

Images From New Space Station Camera Help U.S. Neighbor to the North

Astrium's Cloud Services will support Western Australia Lands Department

CARBON WORLDS
Efficient Production Process for Coveted Nanocrystals

Ingested nanoparticle toxicity

Quantum engines must break down

Nanotechnology holds big potential for NMSU faculty




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement